one
two
==========
three
four
football:
test
it
==========
five
six
this is a football:
soccer
ball

Look above, the word football has this symbol :
I want to delete this symbol which is located 2 lines under ========= but not any other : which is located else where i the text. I need to change only 2 lines under =========

So, if a colon occurs with two lines after the ========== line and before the line that contains the colon, you want to delete that colon? If there are more restrictions, you will need to provide details.

Find What :(?-s)==========\R.*\R.*\R.*\K:Replace With : (empty)

(?-s) = turns off . matching end-of-line (EOL) characters

\R = this matches EOL: \r, \n, or \r\n

==========\R = find the ===-line, including its EOL

.*\R = match exactly one whole line (including EOL), and .* grabs as much as it can. Thus

.*\R.*\R.* finds two whole lines, plus some or all of the next

\K = “throw away” everything before there: all the stuff up to \K must match, but it won’t be included in the official “search and replace match”

: = match the : character. Since \K removed everything else before that from the match, the : character is the only character in our search and replace match

By replacing whatever was matched (ie, that colon) with nothing, you will delete the colon, but only if there are two lines between the ==== and the line with the colon.

At some point, you need to actively start learning regular expressions on your own, rather than just piling new requirements in the help forum. This FAQ posting should give you a good place to start.

A note on how you’re presenting yourself. People in help forums are more likely to help you if you are polite and patient, and show a willingness to learn. Instead of just giving a new set of requirements, it would be nice if you had done something like: “thanks for the previous help. I have more I want to do: here’s what I need; here’s what I’ve tried; here’s how it didn’t match my expectations; can you please help me figure out what I’ve done wrong”. This shows a willingness to learn, and do it yourself, and that you are here for help, rather than to get us to do the job you’re paid for for free while you reap the benefits. (Admittedly, your request may not be for your job, but we have no way of knowing… and usually “urgent” things aren’t for a simple hobby.)

If you keep demanding, and saying “urgent”, and using “133T speak”, and starting new threads to ask what you’ve already asked, and adding new requirements without showing an effort to do it yourself and to learn, then those of us in a position to help you are likely to stop wanting to be helpful.

I’m just trying to help you … and part of helping you is helping you learn how to help yourself, and how to ask effective questions. I was browsing someplace else yesterday, and found this: “How to ask questions the smart way”, which has some good general advice for asking questions in online forums.

The regex I showed matched and eliminated the two “:” characters from the exact data you posted. If it didn’t do so for you, first, I’d check if you remembered to enable ☑ Regular Expression. And, if your cursor isn’t at the beginning of the document, you probably also want ☑ Wrap around.

If that still doesn’t work, as @Terry-R suggested, supply the regular expression exactly as you typed it. When you embed it in the forum, you can wrap it in `-characters, so it looks like, `(?-s)==========\R.\R.\R.*\K:`, and will render like(?-s)==========\R.*\R.*\R.*\K: . Make sure you copy/paste, rather than retyping – it is easy to accidentally mistype what you think you see.

Also, supply the exact text you’re trying to run the search-and-replace on: to make sure the text doesn’t get interpreted as Markdown (ie, to make sure the forum doesn’t try to use characters from your text as formatting characters), you can either indent every row four spaces or one TAB (open textfile in Notepad++, highlight it all, hit TAB, copy, then paste in the forum), or you can use a trick that @Scott-Sumner explains in his excellent “Markdown code on this forum”, which is to start it with a line that’s ```z and ends with ```

```z
one
two
==========
three
four
football:
test
it
==========
five
six
this is a football:
soccer
ball
```

That same article also explains how to embed an image, using the syntax ![](https://i.imgur.com/pWS5fis.png). To take a screenshot, you can use Alt+PrtScrn to grab the current window, or PrtScrn to grab your whole desktop, and then paste it into mspaint.exe or your favorite bitmap editor, and save it to your drive. Or use Windows Snipping Tool (comes with Windows 10) to highlight whatever portion of your screen you want, and File > Save As to save to your drive. Once you’ve got it as a physical file, you can upload to imgur.com or some other similar file-sharing service, then embed it using the syntax I showed above.

Speaking of: here’s a screenshot of my version of your text, along with the Replace window:
In these circumstances, if I keep hitting Find Next, the highlight will go from one colon to the next, then wrap back to the first. And if I hit Replace, it will remove the current colon; if I had Replace All, it will remove all the matching colons.

My attitude is not very courageous, as I’m stepping in that post, when everything is very well said and done !!

But, to sump up, Rumi, here is , below, a regex S/R which, both, adds your ========== line and gets rid of any possible : located after the word football

SEARCH (?-s)((?:.*(\R)){2}.*football):?

REPLACE ==========\2\1

So, assuming the sample text :

one
two
three
four
football:
test
it
five
six
this is a football:
soccer
ball
End of
test
seven
eight
the football match is over
nine
ten

It would give, after replacement the following text :

one
two
==========
three
four
football
test
it
==========
five
six
this is a football
soccer
ball
End of
test
==========
seven
eight
the football match is over
nine
ten

BTW, Peter, you said, in your last post that a step-by-step replacement was possible, hitting the Replace button.

Unfortunately, Rumi, when a regex contains a \K syntax, most of the time, the step-by-step replacement does not work:-((
In such a case, you must use the Replace All button, exclusively. However, any hit on the Find Nextdoes match each occurrence !

If I understand you ,correctly, you would like to insert a ========== line, two lines above a line which ends with a question mark ? But you did not tell us if you want to keep the ? symbol, after replacement ! Anyway, I give the right regexes for the two cases :-))

So, assuming the text :

One
Two
one?
two
three
four
Any thing?
test
it
five
six
this is a question mark?
soccer
ball

The regex S/R :

SEARCH (?-s)(?:.*(\R)){2}.*\?

REPLACE ==========\1$0

would give the following text, with the ? still present

==========
One
Two
one?
two
==========
three
four
Any thing?
test
it
==========
five
six
this is a question mark?
soccer
ball

And the regex S/R :

SEARCH (?-s)((?:.*(\R)){2}.*)\?

REPLACE ==========\2\1

would give the same text, without the final ? at the end of the third line after the ========== line

==========
One
Two
one
two
==========
three
four
Any thing
test
it
==========
five
six
this is a question mark
soccer
ball

This is not a professional regex-writing forum. We are users of Notepad++, who want to help others learn more about NPP (and learn more ourselves, in the process). Since Notepad++ makes use of regular expressions, we will often provide help with regex questions.

However, after this many rounds, you really need to start applying what you’re learning. Because you are learning, right? We’re not just doing your job for you. Because if we were, we’d be charging you consulting rates.

To reluctantly answer your question, "Suppose the symbol is not : its a ?". The obvious choice would be to try replacing the : from the regex with a ?. Did you try that? What happened? If you did try it, it wouldn’t have matched, so you could have said “when I tried to replace the : with a ? in the regex, it didn’t match/highlight the question mark when I hit FIND, or replace the ? when I hit REPLACE… Why not?” At that point, you would have shown a willingness to learn how to do it, to generalize from what you’ve been shown, and to ask questions about what you tried, rather than hoping we’d do all the work for you. (Such a lost opportunity. :-( )

After you asked that question, one of us could have replied, "if you follow the link to where to find regex docs, the first link there is the NppWiki:Regular Expressions page; you can search that page for ?, and learn that in regular expressions, ? means to match 0 or 1of the last character – the last “character”, in that case, actually being the match in parenthesis just before it. If you want to match the literal of a special character in a regex, you have to escape it by putting a \ in front of it… so to match a literal question mark, you would use the sequence of \? in your regex.

So, if I take @guy038’s (?-s)((?:.*(\R)){2}.*football):?, which matches to a colon, I would change it to (?-s)((?:.*(\R)){2}.*football)\?? to match a question mark instead.